A PAIR OF GEORGE III PAINTED OAK HALL CHAIRS
A PAIR OF GEORGE III PAINTED OAK HALL CHAIRS

CIRCA 1770

Details
A PAIR OF GEORGE III PAINTED OAK HALL CHAIRS
CIRCA 1770
Each with a solid rounded tapering back, painted with a lion crest beneath a marquess's coronet, the saddle seat on turned, stop-fluted, tapering legs joined by a turned H-stretcher, on pad feet, originally brown-varnished, minor restorations
40 in. (102 cm.) high (2)
Provenance
Anonymous sale, Christie's London, 25 June 1987, lot 113.
Anonymous sale, Christie's London, 11 February 1999, lot 13.

Brought to you by

Victoria von Westenholz
Victoria von Westenholz

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Lot Essay

The antiquarian and 'stone' painted chairs, of Roman 'back stool' form and antique-fluted columnar legs terminating in pad feet, display a marquess's coronet and lion crest. Previously thought to have been the crest of the Percy family, Dukes of Northumberland, subsequent research by the College of Arms has proved unsuccessful in identifying the crest.

A paint analysis undertaken by Catherine Hassall of University College London showed that the chairs originally had a brown varnished scheme, which was removed when the chairs were white-painted, with areas of oil gilding around the seat edges. Three subsequent layers of decoration were added which date to before the Second World War - two white and one buff-coloured - which have since been removed to reveal the first white scheme.

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